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افتراضي رد: دراسة احصائية عن اليتم والشخصيات الخالدة
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Francisco Pizarro González, 1st Marqués de los Atabillos (c. 1471 or 1476 – 26 June 1541) was a Spanish conquistador, conqueror of the Incan Empire and founder of Lima, the modern-day capital of Peru. Pizarro was born in Trujillo, Extremadura, modern Spain. Sources differ in the birth year they assign to him: 1471, 1475–1478, or unknown.

He was an illegitimate son of Gonzalo Pizarro Rodríguez de Aguilar (senior) (1446-1522) who as colonel of infantry served in the Italian campaigns under Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba, and in Navarre, with some distinction. His mother was Francisca González Mateos, a woman of slender means from Trujillo, daughter of Juan Mateos, of the family called Los Roperos, and wife María Alonso, labradores pecheros from Trujillo.

His mother married late in life and had a son Francisco Martín de Alcántara, married to Inés Muñoz, who from the beginning was at the Conquest of Perú, where he then lived, always at his brother's side, who held him always as one of his most trusted men.[1] Through his father, Francisco was second cousin to Hernán Cortés, the famed conquistador of Mexico.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_Pizarro

He was the illegitimate son of Gonzalo Pizarro and Francisca González, who paid little attention to his education and he grew up without learning how to read or write. His father was a captain of infantry and had fought in the Neopolitan wars with el Gran Capitán Gonzalo de Córdoba.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12140a.htm
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/exp.../pizarro.shtml

landed at San Mateo Bay in 1532. After traveling through desert and snow-capped mountains, Pizarro and his men (who included Hernando de Soto) arrived at Cajamarca (in 1533), where they captured Atahuallpa, the 13th and last emperor of the Incas. Atahuallpa had just won a civil war against his half-brother (Huáscar), and had executed Huáscar and his family. Atahuallpa had invited Pizarro to a celebratory feast, thinking that the Spanish were not much of a threat. Pizarro ambushed Atahuallpa and killed thousands of his men. Atahuallpa offered a huge ransom for his own release, but Pizarro took the treasure and had Atahuallpa strangled on Aug. 29, 1533; this was the end of the Incan empire.
After looting and generally destroying the Incan capital of Cusco, Pizarro founded Lima (which he called Ciudad de los Reyes, which means "City of the Kings"). Pizarro was assassinated in Lima, Peru, in 1541, by followers of Pedro de Almagro (Cortes' captain) who wanted to seize Lima for its riches

Pizarro was born in Trujillo, Spain in 1478. Nobody knows the exact date. His parents never married and he was brought up by his mother's parents.

His father was the Royal Infantry Captain of Spain, so he was an important guy. His mother was just a regular person. During his childhood he never went to school and thus never learned to read. So he couldn't do a chore or small job that needed education. He herded pigs. After about 15 years of pig herding in 1502 he moved to the West Indies or what is now Haiti. There he lived with his father's brother. And it is said that maybe his father's brother helped Pizarro on his expeditions
http://www.asij.ac.jp/elementary/gr5...ts/wbender.htm
http://www.answers.com/topic/francisco-pizarro

His father, Captain Gonzalo Pizarro, was a veteran of the Italian campaigns and, by all accounts, something of a womanizer. As historian Rafael Varón Gabai relates, “Captain Gonzalo Pizarro’s will shows that he fathered many children with different women, many of whom he acknowledged – perhaps all of them, save for the conqueror of Peru”. Gonzalo Pizarro and Francisco’s mother, Francisca González, never married, and it would appear that the child was largely neglected.

More romanticized, and totally unsubstantiated, versions of Pizarro’s birth have also been put forward. One commonly repeated myth has the infant Pizarro left on the steps of a church, abandoned by his parents. Elaborations upon this theme echo the Romulus and Remus myth, with Pizarro feeding on the milk of a sow to survive.


Read more at Suite101: Francisco Pizarro Biography – The Early Life: The Life of Pizarro Before the Spanish Conquest of the New World http://latin-american-colonization.s...#ixzz0bYgoDDOe
http://latin-american-colonization.s...the_early_life

http://books.google.ps/books?id=YQMc...age&q=&f=false


- هو ابن غير شرعي.
- تربى لدى اقارب امه وربما جده والد امه.
- امه تزوجت في وقت لاحق.
- احد المواقع يقول انه لقيط ترك من قبل والديه على باب الكنيسة.
- وموقع اخر يقول انه اهمل من قبل والديه.
هو حتما عاش بعيد عن والديه لكننا سنعتبره مجهول الطفولة رغم الاثر العظيم لبعده عن والديه كونه غير شرعي .


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